23
Gia’s chin dropped forward onto her chest and
she awoke with a start. She was only half an hour into the movie
and already she was nodding off. She wasn’t nearly as wide awake as
she had thought. She flicked it off and went back to the
bedroom.
Fear hit her like a knife between the ribs as
soon as she opened the door. The room was filled with a rotten
odor. Now she recognized it—the same odor that had been in Nellie’s
room the night she had disappeared. Her gaze shot to the bed and
her heart stopped when she saw it was flat—no familiar little lump
of curled-up child under the covers.
“Vicky?” Her voice cracked as she said the
name and turned on the light. She has to be here!
Without waiting for an answer, Gia rushed to
the bed and pulled the covers down.
“Vicky?” Her voice was almost a whimper.
She’s here—she has to be!
She ran to the closet and fell to her knees,
checking the floor with her hands. Only Vicky’s Ms. Jelliroll Carry
Case was there. Next she crawled over to the bed and looked under
it. Vicky wasn’t there either.
But something else was—a small dark lump. Gia
reached in and grabbed it. She thought she would be sick when she
recognized the feel of a recently peeled and partially eaten
orange.
An orange! Jack’s
words flooded back on her: “Do you want Vicky to end up like Grace
and Nellie? Gone without a trace?” He had said there was something
in the orange— but he had thrown it away! So how had Vicky got hold
of this one… ?
Unless there had been more than one orange in
the playhouse!
This is a nightmare! This
isn’t really happening!
Gia ran through the rest of the apartment,
opening every door, every closet, every cabinet. Vicky was gone!
She hurried back to the bedroom and went to the window. The screen
was missing. She hadn’t noticed that before. Fighting back a scream
as visions of a child’s body smashed against the pavement flashed
before her eyes, she held her breath and looked down. The parking
lot was directly below, well lit by mercury vapor lamps. There was
no sign of Vicky.
Gia didn’t know whether to be relieved or
not. All she knew right now was that her child was missing and she
needed help. She ran for the phone, ready to dial the 911 emergency
police number, then stopped. The police would certainly be more
concerned about a missing child than about two old ladies who had
disappeared, but would they accomplish anything more? Gia doubted
it. There was only one number to call that would do her any good:
Jack’s.
Jack will know what to do. Jack will
help.
She forced her shaking index finger to punch
in the numbers and got a busy signal. She hung up and dialed again.
Still busy. She didn’t have time to wait! She dialed the operator
and told her it was an emergency and she had to break in on the
line. She was put on hold for half a minute that seemed like an
hour, then the operator was back on, telling her that the line
wasn’t busy—the phone had been left off the hook.
Gia slammed the receiver down. What was she
going to do? She was frantic. What was wrong at Jack’s? Had he left
the phone off the hook or had it been knocked off?
She ran back to the bedroom and jammed her
legs into a pair of jeans and pulled on a blouse without removing
her pajamas. She had to find Jack. If he wasn’t at his apartment,
maybe he was at Abe’s store—she was pretty sure she remembered
where that was. She hoped she could remember. Her thoughts were so
jumbled. All she could think of was Vicky.
Vicky, Vicky, where are
you?
But how to get to Jack’s… that was the
problem. Finding a cab would be virtually impossible at this hour,
and the subway, even if she could find a stop nearby, could be
deadly to a woman alone.
The Honda keys she had seen earlier! Where
had they been? She had been cleaning in the kitchen…
She ran over to the flatware drawer and
pulled it open. There they were. She snatched them up and ran out
into the hall. She checked the apartment number on the door: 1203.
Now if only the car was here. The elevator took her straight down
to the first floor and she hurried out into the parking lot. On the
way in this afternoon she had seen numbers on the asphalt by each
parking space.
Please let it be
here! she said to God, to fate, to whatever was in charge of
human events. Is anybody in charge? asked a
small voice in the back of her mind.
She followed the numbers from the 800’s up to
the 1100’s, and there up ahead, crouched like a laboratory mouse
waiting timidly for the next injection, sat a white Honda
Civic.
Please be 1203! Please!
It had to be.
It was.
Almost giddy with relief, she unlocked the
door and slid into the driver’s seat. The standard shift on the
floor gave her a moment’s pause, but she had driven her father’s
old Ford pickup enough miles in Iowa as a teenager. She hoped it
was something you never forgot, like riding a bike.
The engine refused to start until she found
the manual choke, then it sputtered to life. She stalled twice
backing out of the parking space, but once she got it rolling
forward, she had little trouble.
She didn’t know Queens but knew the general
direction she wanted to go. She worked her way toward the East
River until she saw a “To Manhattan” sign and followed the arrow.
When the Queensboro Bridge loomed into view, she slammed the gas
pedal to the floor. She had been driving tentatively until now,
reining her emotions, clutching the wheel with white-knuckled
intensity, wary of missing a crucial turn. But with her destination
in sight, she began to cry.